Of the 610 school districts in Ohio, 238 would gain money, 210 would receive the same amount and 162 would lose money over two years, compared with current 2017 funding. Under the Senate plan, schools statewide would receive 1 percent more each year.

But that's little consolation if your school is the one losing money. Among those hardest hit would be Sycamore Community schools, which would lose nearly $3.5 million over two years, and Mason City schools, which stands to lose $2 million in that time.

Cincinnati Schools would gain $5.7 million from the proposed changes.

Senate Republicans changed Gov. John Kasich's plan, which cut money to schools with declining populations. Lawmakers looked at two years rather than five years of declines. Ohio's schools overall are shrinking. Student population has declined nearly 3 percent statewide over the past five years.

These numbers are subject to change. Senators are expected to pass the budget next week. After that, a group of House and Senate lawmakers will agree on a final version. Kasich can line-item veto any changes he dislikes. The budget must be passed by June 30.